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277160

Collective (Un)Consciousness: A Magic Realist Reading of Carpentier’s <i>The Kingdom of this World</i> (1957) and Wa Thiong’o’s <i>A Grain of Wheat</i> (1967)

Article

Last updated: 04 Jan 2025

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Abstract

The uniqueness of Latin American and African experiences has rendered them subject to detailed research and thorough discussion. Throughout the course of history, most Third World nations have witnessed various switches in ruling regimes which have in turn resulted in traumatic shifts of consciousness. Among these nations are the Latin American and African countries that have long been subject to colonialism which have exercised political and social domination over them, inducing a traumatic consciousness that can only behold itself as isolated and discontinuous. This paper selects the Cuban Alejo Carpentier's The Kingdom of this World (1957) and the Kenyan Ngugi Wa Thiong'o's A Grain of Wheat (1967) as representatives of these two unique historical and cultural cases. Dealing with such special political and cultural nature requires an equally unique means of expression, hence the use of magic realism.
This study traces the use of magic realism as a mode of writing adopted by Alejo Carpentier and Ngugi wa Thiongo in their novels The Kingdom of this World and A Grain of Wheat respectively, to represent the common individual and collective traumas induced by two seemingly distinctive colonial experiences that have led to the presence of hybrid communal identities. Besides investigating the role of magic realism as a means of political and cultural resistance in both Cuban and Kenyan literature as exemplary of subjugated nations, the current study also traces the concept of collective consciousness that is either formulated by the colonizer or experienced by the colonized during the colonial process. The article further exposes the fundamental role of the collective unconsciousness of the colonized peoples belonging tothese hybrid communities as a primary tool for uniting the scattered souls and emancipating minds from the imposed colonial cultural clutch.

DOI

10.21608/ttaip.2022.277160

Keywords

magic realism, Cuban literature, Kenyan literature, Alejo Carpentier, Ngugi Wa Thiong’o, collective consciousness, collective unconsciousness

Authors

First Name

Fatma

Last Name

El Diwany

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Department of English, Faculty of Foreign Languages and Translation, Misr University for Science and Technology (MUST), Egypt.

Email

fatma.eldewany@must.edu.eg

City

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Orcid

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Volume

4

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

38514

Issue Date

2022-12-01

Receive Date

2022-05-16

Publish Date

2022-12-30

Page Start

143

Page End

160

Print ISSN

2636-4069

Online ISSN

2735-3451

Link

https://ttaip.journals.ekb.eg/article_277160.html

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https://ttaip.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=277160

Order

8

Type

Original Article

Type Code

1,357

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Textual Turnings: An International Peer-Reviewed Journal in English Studies

Publication Link

https://ttaip.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Collective (Un)Consciousness: A Magic Realist Reading of Carpentier’s <i>The Kingdom of this World</i> (1957) and Wa Thiong’o’s <i>A Grain of Wheat</i> (1967)

Details

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Article

Created At

23 Jan 2023